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Birds make the best of a pier damaged by Hurricane Ike in October 2008 in Gilchrist, Texas. The area, one of North America's renowned bird migration and bird-watching areas, was left unusually quiet in the aftermath of the hurricane.

In the wake of Superstorm Sandy and the spiteful me-too nor'easter, much of the East Coast looked so battered and flooded, so strewed with toppled trees and stripped of dunes and beaches, that many observers feared the worst. Any day, surely, the wildlife corpses would start showing up - especially birds, for who likelier to pay when a sky turns rogue than the ones who act as if they own it?

Yet biologists studying the hurricane's aftermath say there is remarkably little evidence that birds, or any other countable, charismatic fauna for that matter, have suffered the sort of mass casualties seen in environmental disasters like the BP oil spill of 2010, when thousands of oil-slicked seabirds washed ashore, unable to fly, feed or stay warm.

"With an oil spill, the mortality is way more direct and evident," said Andrew Farnsworth, Ph.D., a scientist at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology. "And though it's possible that thousands of birds were slammed into the ocean by this storm and we'll never know about it, my gut tells me that didn't happen."

Sky masters

To the contrary, scientists said, powerful new satellite tracking studies of birds on the wing - including one that coincided with the height of Sandy's fury - reveal birds as the supreme masters of extreme weather management, able to skirt deftly around gale-force winds, correct course after being blown horribly astray or even use a hurricane as a kind of slingshot to propel themselves forward at hyperspeed.

"We must remind ourselves that 40 to 50 percent of birds are migratory, often traveling thousands of miles a year between their summer and winter grounds," said Gary Langham, Ph.D., chief scientist of the National Audubon Society in Washington. "The only way they can accomplish that is to have amazing abilities that are far beyond anything we can do."

Humans may complain about climate change. Birds do something about it.

"Migration, in its most basic sense, is a response to a changing climate," Dr. Farnsworth said. "It's finding some way to deal with a changing regime of temperature and food availability."

For birds, cyclones, squalls and other meteorological wild cards have always been a part of the itinerant's package, and they have evolved stable strategies for dealing with instability.

Given the likelihood that extreme weather events will become more common as the planet heats up, Dr. Farnsworth said, "The fact that birds can respond to severe storms is to some extent a good sign."

Nevertheless, he added, "How many times they can do it, and how severe is too severe, are open questions."

Avian meteorologists

Among a bird's weather management skills is the power to detect the air pressure changes that signal a coming storm, and with enough advance notice to prepare for adversity. Scientists are not certain how this avian barometer works, yet the evidence of its existence is clear.

As just one example, Dr. Langham cited the behavior of the birds in his backyard in Washington on the days before Sandy arrived.

"They were going crazy, eating food in a driving rain and wind when normally they would never have been out in that kind of weather," he said. "They knew a bigger storm was coming, and they were trying to get food while they could."

Scientists have found that many migratory birds, especially the passerines - mostly songbirds - seek to hug the coast and its potential perches as long as possible, leaving the jump over open water to the last possible moment. But for birds over the open ocean, hurricanes pose a real challenge, and they can be blown off course by hundreds of miles. In fact, ornithologists and serious bird-watchers admit they look forward to big storms that might blow their way exotic species they'd otherwise never see in their lifetime.

Sandy did not disappoint them. As an enormous hybrid of winter and tropical storm fronts with a huge reach, it pulled in a far more diverse group of birds than the average hurricane, and websites like Ebird.org and Birdcast.info were alive with thrilled reports of exceptional sightings - of the European shorebird called the northern lapwing showing up in Massachusetts; of Eastern wood-pewees that should have been in Central and South America suddenly appearing again in New York and Ontario; of trindade petrels, which normally spend their lives over the open ocean off Brazil, popping up in western Pennsylvania; and of flocks of Leach's storm-petrels and pomarine jaegers, arctic relatives of gulls, making unheard-of tours far inland and through Manhattan.

Most of the visitors didn't linger, and once the storm had passed they took off, presumably heading back to where they wanted to be.

Little birds are tough

Songbirds and their so-called passerine kin may be notorious lightweights - if a sparrow were a letter, it could travel on a single stamp - but that doesn't mean they're as helpless as loose feathers in the wind.

"Passerine" means "perching," and the members of this broad taxonomic fraternity all take their perching quite seriously.

When a storm hits, a passerine bird can alight on the nearest available branch or wire with talons that will reflexively close upon contact and remain closed by default, without added expenditure of energy, until the bird chooses to open them again.

If you've ever watched a perched bird in a high wind and worried, "Poor squinting thing - could it be blown away and smashed to bits down the road?" the answer is not unless the perch is blown away with it.

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